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BU

Move-In Week Window Crawlers: Three Bay State Road Dorms Hit Before Dawn

MAburglarytimely warninghigh confidence
Confirmed Threat

Around move-in at Boston University, unknown suspects entered residence halls along Bay State Road through open ground-floor windows in the early-morning hours, stealing property from student rooms. The pattern ran from an August 22, 2023 break-in at 111 Bay State Rd. (initially reported by MIT Police) to two September 2, 2023 incidents at 191 Bay State Rd. and 133 Bay State Rd.. BU Police issued a consolidated timely-warning crime alert on September 2, 2023 urging students to secure doors and windows.

Alerts
1
Response
Killed
Injured
Institution
Boston University
Private R1 · MA
~36,700 studentsEverbridgeBU Alert
Confirmed Timeline

Alert Sequence

1 message in sequence · 1 verified verbatim

INITIAL ALERTEmail
Verified verbatimBU Police Crime Alert Archive1116 chars
BOSTON UNIVERSITY POLICE CRIME ALERT: BURGLARY On 08/22/2023 at 04:42 AM at 111 Bay State Rd., an unknown person entered the residence and stole property. On 09/02/2023 at approximately 04:00 AM at 191 Bay State Rd, an unknown person entered the dormitory through an open window on the ground level and took property from inside the residence. On 09/02/2023 between 03:00 AM and 06:00 AM at 133 Bay State Rd., a person plucked property through an open window but did not enter the dormitory. The information suggests that the suspect is targeting accessible open or unlocked windows. The community is asked to secure doors, accessible windows, and to lock security screens. This notice is a Timely Warning which is intended to alert the community about certain crimes occurring on campus which represent a serious or continuing threat to the community. It is the intention of the Boston University Police to provide as much information as possible in the hope of preventing another such incident. If you have any information regarding this incident please contact the Boston University Police at (617) 353-2121.
Alert consolidates three incidents spanning August 22 to September 2, 2023 into a single timely warning — a common practice for serial property crimes
All three targeted buildings on Bay State Road, BU's primary residential corridor: 191 Bay State Rd is the Harriet E. Richards Cooperative House and 133 Bay State Rd is Kilachand Hall
Incidents occurred during move-in week when students are most vulnerable — unfamiliar with surroundings, doors propped open, windows left ajar
The phrase 'plucked property through an open window' is unusually specific — distinguishes between entry and reach-in theft
Timely warning issued 11 days after first incident — reflects the Clery Act's 'as soon as pertinent information is available' standard for pattern crimes
Context

Background

Move-in week at urban universities is a peak period for property crimes. Students are settling into new living situations, often leaving windows open in late-August heat, and are unfamiliar with building security protocols. Bay State Road is Boston University's primary residential corridor, a stretch of historic brownstones converted to dormitories along the Charles River. The three targeted buildings are within a few blocks of each other, suggesting a single suspect who knew the area. BU issued the timely warning as a consolidated alert covering the pattern of incidents, which is standard practice under the Clery Act when multiple related crimes indicate a continuing threat. This case represents the most common type of Clery timely warning, property crime, which vastly outnumbers emergency notifications in most institutions' annual security reports but receives far less public attention than shootings or bomb threats.
Analysis

Key Findings

Property crime timely warnings are the most common type of Clery alert at most institutions but are severely underrepresented in public discourse about campus safety
Move-in week creates a predictable vulnerability window that experienced criminals exploit — a finding consistent across urban campuses nationwide
BU's consolidated approach (one alert for three incidents) is standard Clery practice but means students may not realize the pattern until days after the first crime
The distinction between 'entered the residence' and 'plucked property through an open window' reflects careful legal language — entry vs. non-entry affects the criminal charge
Outcome
Suspect not identified. BU Police Detective Unit launched active investigation. No injuries reported. Crime alert prompted campus-wide window security awareness.
Provenance

Sources

  1. Official
  2. News
  3. News
Tags
burglarytimely-warningproperty-crimemove-in-weekurban-campuswindow-entryserial-crimemassachusetts
Added April 2026Updated May 2026Via ingestion